• @otacon239@feddit.de
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    5626 days ago

    You also generally do not have to download a bunch of drivers or spend six hours in the command line hand-assembling the goddamn operating system.

    It’s sad that this is still the perspective people have on Linux in a lot of places. This describes a small handful of distros that are often the choice for those that know what they’re getting into.

    • @dhtseany@lemmy.ml
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      2326 days ago

      It’s generally repeated by people who are aware that Linux exists but haven’t actually used it since kernel 2.6 and in turn makes errant assumptions like the terminal is anymore necessary in Linux than it is in Windows in 2024. These people annoy the shit out of me.

      • @Feathercrown@lemmy.world
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        926 days ago

        The command line isn’t necessary, but it is the common thing between most linux OSes, and so it still gets recommended. I bet if you look up “how to unzip zip file linux” the first answer will use the command line, and not any distro-specific right-click options, because it’s more applicable.

        • @Feathercrown@lemmy.world
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          426 days ago

          (I tried it, there was one prominent “try the context menu” answer, and the rest were command line. Granted that answer was at the top… under Google’s AI summary of several command line options)

      • @accideath@lemmy.world
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        126 days ago

        Generally yes, but: if you happen to have certain hardware (like nvidia gpus or certain wireless cards), getting those drivers can be quite a hassle, depending on your distro.

        Also, the terminal might not be necessary for day to day use but if you want to install a program that isn’t in your distro’s repos or do something a little more out if the ordinary, most tutorials and guides will still prioritize the terminal.

        Like, I‘d be confident setting up linux for my grandma because all she uses are browser and file explorer anyways. But for my dad, who‘d do more involved things and needs certain programs but doesn’t want to deal with commands, Linux just isn’t quite it yet. (Besides his dependency on MS Office).

    • @cafeinux@infosec.pub
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      726 days ago

      While reading, I was thinking about the time it took me the last time I installed Linux, and I agreed with the author: it took me several hours.

      Then I remembered why it took me so long: I wanted to install the most minimal Void Linux configuration possible with graphical session on a 16 years old laptop that was already too underpowered to run Windows XP when it got out, so I pondered every package installation (do I really need this to make it work? It’s 10 MB, that’s a bit heavy…) and had to tinker a bit with the drivers to get it to work just right.

      Installing Fedora on my main laptop however took 15 minutes, from booting to having a functional system, 20 if you count the iso download and the copy on a USB stick.

    • @nfsm@discuss.tchncs.de
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      426 days ago

      Hardware issues have been fading more and more. Just recently saw a small survey in a Linux channel with about 1000 responses. And about 50% retired no issues with hardware plus a lot more that only had 1 issue (there are still some vendors who don’t offer compatibility like AMD or Intel). So most people don’t actually need to download drivers, it’s all in the kernel.

    • No_
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      125 days ago

      It’s called a reputation. It’s not fixed overnight. It’s not “sad”, it’s transitory.

  • @CaptainCancel@sh.itjust.works
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    2426 days ago

    I finally had enough of Win11 and downgraded to 10. What a difference! I can actually reliably change my audio outputs again with 2 clicks! I can get to old school settings panels with less hassle and digging too.

    I know this comes off as a kidnapping victim saying “My old kidnapper let me use the shower”, but until all my games run well in Linux, I’m stuck here.

    • @Ashelyn@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      525 days ago

      Which games do you play? In my experience the only ones that haven’t worked are ones with a hefty (kernel-level) anti cheat or similar. Proton is surprisingly good at emulating windows games!

      • @CaptainCancel@sh.itjust.works
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        425 days ago

        Most games I play work on Proton. It’s Destiny 2 that will get your account banned if you use Linux. I’ve invested too much time at this point to risk a ban, so I’ll need to wait until I finish the last DLC before I switch. I’ve run Suse and Redhat in the past, but the last time I attempted to game on Linux was Team Fortress 2. Based on my experience with SteamDeck, it wouldn’t be hard to get most games up and running.

      • @Cypher@lemmy.world
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        125 days ago

        Total War games are buggy on Linux despite having linux “ports”.

        Star Citizen also runs poorly on Linux. They’re meant to support it at some point so maybe in a decade…

    • @melpomenesclevage@lemm.ee
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      26 days ago

      ah haha so as someone who stopped at 7, because 8 was too invasive:

      your games won’t run there for long, dear. soon, more will run on Linux.

    • @Psythik@lemmy.world
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      326 days ago

      I would do the same, but then I’d have to go back to Win10’s laughably awful implementation of HDR support, and I can’t have that. So instead I downloaded SoundSwitch to fix your first issue, and installed StartAllBack to fix the second (you could also simply pin the Control Panel to the Start menu).

        • @Psythik@lemmy.world
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          225 days ago

          I’m already aware of this (how could I not be? The story was on the front page for days) and I’m not worried about it. This isn’t the first time Microsoft has blocked alternative taskbars; somebody always finds a workaround.

        • @Psythik@lemmy.world
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          124 days ago

          I dual boot Arch but mostly use Win11, cause KDE’s implementation of HDR is even more fiddly and tedious. In 11, all I gotta do is enable the setting to use HDR, and it just works. I don’t even have to calibrate my display cause my monitor has a setting to automatically process HDR content for me. All I gotta do is leave in-game calibrations at their default setting, and the monitor does the rest. Literally couldn’t be easier. Win11 can even automatically convert SDR games to HDR (called “AutoHDR”), and my nVidia GPU can do the same for videos (streaming or local, unfortunately I can’t find the setting in the Linux Nvidia drivers). And it just works effortlessly.

          So yeah, that’s why I still use Windows11. No other OS makes HDR so easy. (But TBF the monitor helps a lot too; LG C1, BTW.)

    • @antidote101@lemmy.world
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      25 days ago

      Everything runs fine on Linux, just follow the ten pages of commands and technical procedures to get them working and installed with your particular hardware.

      …I like tinkering, but I don’t like tinkering with stuff that should already just work by now. Linux should already just work by now, I keeping waiting to switch to it, I keep finding out nothing has changed, and you still need to know a bunch of archaic command line stuff just to get the basics working.

      They like it that way.

      • @TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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        325 days ago

        When did you last use Linux, 2006?

        I install steam. I press play. Game runs.

        Only really exception is the ones that force the installation of a rootkit (kernel-level anti-cheat) in order to play, which I wouldn’t play on Windows either because I don’t want a rootkit from a random dev on my machine.

          • @TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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            24 days ago

            Huh? You specifically replied to someone talking about Linux not playing all their games:

            but until all my games run well in Linux, I’m stuck here.

            You then continued this talking point:

            Everything runs fine on Linux, just follow the ten pages of commands and technical procedures to get them working and installed with your particular hardware.

            So yeah. I thought that because that’s exactly what you were doing. What’s confusing you here?

            • @antidote101@lemmy.world
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              24 days ago

              Yah, but apparently that person is wrong according to everyone here, and I’m wrong for agreeing with them more broadly (I sarcastically said “everything runs just fine” not “all games”).

              So in light of this new information (being told what I was talking about), I’m changing my vote.

              I don’t use linux because of its users being shitheads. Nagging smug fuck face shitheads, with no social skills, or communications skills, who would prefer to try to pressure you into their cult than just talk like normal people.

              Now let’s check in with a more recent thread on the topic.

              Installing most Linux OSes has been easy enough for decades, but a program not in your distro’s repos could be a nightmare to get working.

              On no, a desenting opinion, y’all better go downvote them, zealot fucks.

              • @TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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                24 days ago

                Lmao you’re so angry

                Take the L. You entered a discussion where someone was talking about gaming, continued that discussion, then became rude when I was continuing to talk about gaming, now you’re flying into a frenzied rage because you can’t talk like an adult.

                Seriously, why can’t Windows users talk like normal people, rather than angry, whiny shitheads? Why do they need to justify their cult behaviour so much? It’s weird.

                Wah wah wah someone downvoted you, what a travesty, your poor fee fees 🥺

                • @antidote101@lemmy.world
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                  024 days ago

                  I just don’t like wankers telling me what I was saying, or who deny all failings of something because it’s their chosen sacred cow.

  • @reddig33@lemmy.world
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    1526 days ago

    Because the current CEO of Microsoft is a beancounter who is interested in that sweet sweet enterprise services money. He’s not focused on improving consumer Windows quality — just ways to wring more money out of its users.

      • @stembolts@programming.dev
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        626 days ago

        Plenty of engineer bean counters exist unfortunately, it’s still the preferred way of gaining promotions. Show the higher ups how many beans you preserved, and you get a higher salary. Count even more beans, higher salary, etc. The IBM effect.

        Suddenly engineers are in charge, but they set aside engineering long ago for “glorious” beans.

  • @perviouslyiner@lemmy.world
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    25 days ago

    He’s right about the search - open start menu and type WINMERG - it lists nine Bing searches and the WinMerge installer file, but not the installed program “WinMerge”. Yet it will find PowerPoint if you just search PO

  • @BigTrout75@lemmy.world
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    1226 days ago

    Windows 11 comes in many flavors. But mostly Enterprise and consumer (Home, and Pro). If you have Enterprise your company pays a subscription for the ability to control and mostly to turn off most of the bullshit telemetry and ads. Consumer versions are pretty much just ad supported OSs. Yep, even if you paid for it. Ads are everywhere.

    • lazynooblet
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      1326 days ago

      Enterprise / Pro don’t need subscriptions. There are subscriptions, but you can also purchase a straight up license

    • @Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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      26 days ago

      I own a consumer version (home) and I’ve never once seen an ad. They did turn on copilot once, but I disabled it in less than a minute and I’ve never seen it since.

      This said, windows 11 just sucks compared to 10. They moved the start bar to the center to copy Mac (I moved that back ages ago, though). They also stripped all the great start menu tiles away, so it’s just kind of… barren now.

      I just don’t see any significant way 11 is better than 10. That’s why it sucks.

      Edit: Wait since when can you get a subscription to windows? The pro version of 11 is a one time fee of $5-10 if you buy a key online. It’s dirt cheap.

    • @nfsm@discuss.tchncs.de
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      226 days ago

      I work on IT support and all of our clients use enterprise. It’s not just the Ads.
      Microsoft has slowly been dumbing down it’s apps and the OS. Removing features that where good for office users.
      Access to settings is a joke. It’s a bad OS. I fell like they’ve gone backwards, again.
      My pet peeve right now is why can’t the taskbar be placed on the sides? It had that functionality before.

  • @Asclepiaz@lemmy.world
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    1025 days ago

    As a Windows 10 user I swear 11 just exists to force me to learn more about Linux. I dun wanna learn a new OS! I have too many hobbies and I just want steam and league. For now I’m just paying attention to all u Linux nerds and taking note. If Microsoft forces my hand I think mint looks like the easiest to setup based on what comments I’ve read.

    • @kellyaster@lemmy.world
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      525 days ago

      I installed Linux Mint on an old laptop five years ago, it was pretty easy to set up. If you’re coming from Windows, you shouldn’t have much of a problem. It’s pretty intuitive. I think I was using the Cinnamon desktop environment, which I’m sure has only improved since then.

  • @cosmicrookie@lemmy.world
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    926 days ago

    Its because they want us to change to Linux. I know i sound like a typical lemmy user already but i changed to Mint a month ago and loving it. I’ve only used the terminal a couple or times but was not entirely necessary.

      • @yuri@pawb.social
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        525 days ago

        What the fuck, right? I’ve been on linux for more than a few years now, and I haven’t had any headaches equivalent to the shit windows was doing constantly. Like 80% of my files were made read-only and my privileges to change permissions were completely revoked for seemingly no reason. And that was just another, run of the mill issue.

        • @melpomenesclevage@lemm.ee
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          -125 days ago

          sounds like a skill issue to me. if you were any good at computers, you would’ve stuck to windows. have you even read the manual?

      • @TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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        25 days ago

        Yeah I’m frequently having to open powershell/windows terminal or worse, attempt to navigate the shitshow of complexity that is the windows registry to do the most basic things.

        I don’t have to do that on my Linux machines.

        Plus since MS fired most of their QA team, there’s been the occasional crazy issue. My audio wasn’t working for months after a windows update. I did a system restore, I uninstalled and reinstalled audio drivers, but nothing worked. Then months later, suddenly it did. That just isn’t acceptable for a product that costs as much as Windows does, and continues making even more money by spying on the user and selling the information.

        I feel like because of the decline in usability of windows since 7, and the perpetual improvements to Linux, we now see Linux being the easier (as in ease of use) choice.

        If Dell/HP/others started putting Linux on most of their machines, I don’t think it’d cause issues for most people at all.

        • @melpomenesclevage@lemm.ee
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          25 days ago

          yeah. Linux now isn’t necessarily better than windows 7, but its a hell of a step up from windows 11.

          and they fuck with the appearance enough; you could just tell people they’re on windows still anf they might believe you.

  • @Boomkop3@reddthat.com
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    326 days ago

    I very much switched to yahoo, cuz google just didn’t let me find anything. I am running windows 11, they’re still updating the somewhat older but less shitty builds of it

  • @proper@lemmy.world
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    -826 days ago

    I’ve updated to every new Windows as they come out and 11 was no different. The only differences I noticed from 10 was I had to go to settings to put the start button back on the left, and there are not icons for cop/paste/etc. I don’t get why people are always crying about it.

    • LeoOPMA
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      426 days ago

      Yep, but I left the Start button alone, myself. While I tend to prefer Linux, I still have to have Windows. 11 is mostly fine, but I think people have beef with it because lots of things changed, including the design, and people, for the most part, really hate change. Oh and the ads. Oh and Edge likes to pop up instead of your normal browser from time to time.

      • @7U5K3N@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1126 days ago

        Forced window grouping.

        That was idiotic. The work computer has win11 we use a proprietary software that doesn’t display in the hover popup. So I’ve you’ve got 4 windows open of that software… good luck guessing which one is which from the taskbar.

        It took them ages after launch to add that back into windows.

        • LeoOPMA
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          526 days ago

          That sounds terrible. Does Win+Tab get you the preview? That would have probably been my first thought after the frustration set in.

          • @7U5K3N@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            126 days ago

            Hilariously Enough on win11 it previews the window if you hit the alt desktop button on the taskbar… so I started doing that before they put ungroup back. Lol

        • @Feathercrown@lemmy.world
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          226 days ago

          I recently learned you can use modifier keys while clicking taskbar programs. Ctrl cycles between program instances without showing the preview. Shift opens a new one. Ctrl+shift opens one as admin I think?

      • @Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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        126 days ago

        Never had an ad, and edge only does that during updates. They 100% try to trick you into making it your default browser. It’s really shitty, but it’s like once a year at most.

        • @Feathercrown@lemmy.world
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          226 days ago

          Nah man, it opens from the start menu too. Search for a program you have installed? Nope, auto-search the web and launch Bing in Edge to show you the result.

    • @Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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      126 days ago

      It’s just Linux users mostly.

      This said, I think 10 was better. I miss the live tiles, and I also hated the centering of things. Overall, I just don’t see any single improvement in 11.